pappilon wrote:cthia wrote:Besides, teachers don't hide behind a badge and a gun with a license to kill on a pledge to protect.
If a candidate doesn't think he can be fair to all races as an officer, then go and flip burgers. Part of the training course is comprised of pop up targets. You don't shoot the teacher. You don't shoot the doctor. You don't shoot the kid. You don't empty your clip into everything black.pappilon wrote:I think it is not an issue of the brush being too wide but rather the canvas being too small. Its not always racism so much as racial bias, which is even more insidious. And yes it is about training and selection, and addressing bias. And the issue is not just about Black males, there is also the issue of the mentally ill. Some of the right people are getting that license to kill with impunity, but some of the wrong ones are, too.
PS: I took the amoral choice. I'm strongly right hand dominant, so I choose to save the arbitrarily lucky kid that happens to be to my right, in the interest of compromise between doing my job and self-preservation. You can't win the Kobayashi Maru scenario without cheating.Hornblower wrote:I think this thread has derailed!
What I was trying to point out was that The Detweillers do have a sense of Morality. It may not coincide with the 21st century Christian Fundamentalist version of morality. But it does seem to reflect the morality of some 21st Century neonazis. And the point of science fiction is to examine those differences.
Back on topic?
The Ethical name for the argument is "Cultural Relativity." In short every cultural group has different traditions, folkways, and Morals that differ from each other. Some differences are just what you wear and eat on a given holiday. Other differences include how the majority of a cultural group deals with a minority, or how their judicial system works.
But Cultural Relativity states that all cultures are equal in abstract, and more importantly, cannot be judged by another culture. This is simply because the cultural biases of each culture make their members believe that their core beliefs are morally superior and ethically correct, and because they are using this ingrained core as their judicial beliefs, other cultures, therefore, are not ethically correct by definition.